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Aerial photo by
Marinas.com
The area to the left
that looks like enclosures are the
Heugh
Gun Battery,
A similar view in colour by
Martin Brewster in colour can be seen by
clicking
here.
The rocky coastline around Hartlepool, on the north east coast of England, has been the cause of many shipwrecks over the centuries. In the 1840's a decision was made to build a lighthouse to warn of the danger. There have been three lighthouses on the cliff top at Hartlepool. The current one built in 1927. The first stood from 1846–1915 and was probably the first successful gas lit lighthouse in the world. It was taken down during the First World War because it stood in the way of the guns at Heugh Battery. It was replaced by a temporary light on the nearby Town Moor, which was used until 1927 when the current lighthouse was built, (see more below). The lighthouse was undamaged by German shelling in early 1915 which claimed the first life on British soil of World War 1. The lighthouse was removed to its present position to allow a better line of fire for the coastal artillery. Hartlepool’s
Heugh
Gun Battery,
The First Lighthouse
Shown in the Photochrome postcard
from probably 1905 to 1910, this is Hartlepool's first lighthouse and said to have existed from 1846 to 1915 and was probably the first successful gas lit
lighthouse in the world. It was taken down in 1916, during the First world War, as it
got in the way of of the guns at
Heugh
Battery. The lantern and lens were then
mounted on a temporary square pyramidal frame tower with enclosed watch room,
located on the Town Moor behind the guns. The lantern and lens are now on
display at the
Hartlepool
Museum
Entry to this museum is free and there is free parking as well. It was voted the 'most popular new attraction in England' by the English Tourist Board and winner of the BT North East Award for the 'Favourite Children's Visit', the Museum of Hartlepool is among Britain's top ten free visitor attractions opened since 1994. The original lighthouse, a 14.5m (46ft) tapered sandstone tower, was the first British lighthouse designed to be fuelled entirely by natural gas from nearby coal mines.
This is a photograph from around 1900-1905 The Heugh and Lighthouse Battery were built
side by side on the East Battery site in 1860 along with a third battery
further north at Fairy Cove. Great efforts were made to strengthen the
crumbling cliffs but to little avail at Fairy Cove where the battery began
to topple into the sea a few years later. You can find a full account of how
they worked together to defend this part of the coast, particularly during
the First World War, in our location page
Heugh
Gun Battery.
Please let us know any other information that we can add to the Grid or page and any errors that you discover. Before making a long trip to any location it is always wise to double check the current information, websites like magazines may be correct at the time the information is written, but things change and it is of course impossible to double check all entries on a regular basis. If you have any good photographs that you feel would improve the illustration of this page then please let us have copies. In referring to this page it is helpful if you quote both the Page Ref and Topic or Section references from the Grid below. To print the planning grid select it then right click and print the selected area. Please submit information on locations you discover so that this system continues to grow.
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